s. we 1.‘. nrodish 11m. cloche hi 1h interesting mini. l: is from - _' llenrf Msuel, Paris. OTTAWA, Sept. 27.—The Supreme ~ offlflansda in a Judlmwl ded down today held that claims Dominion taxes had priority over = for ‘Provincial taxes. The ap- was §aken on behalf of the At- y General of Quebec. action arose out of a bank- matter. Both the Domlnlvn eminent and the Quebec author- had olpim against the bankrupt taxes. There wes not sufficient to bothqglaims in full. It then be- a question as to which claim priority. ' . trustee in bankruptcy in his d gheet gave priority to the oi the Dominion and 1h that _ . suhatained by the trial judge. sJusticp. Panneton, The court of Bench held, Mr. Justice Guer- ntégg, that both claims rank _ that decision. the . n appealed to the Supreme of Supreme Court of Canada in (lament, delivered by Mr. Justice ql-tdand concurred in by all the ofghat court except Mr. Jus- Duff and Mr. Justice Rinfret, slim‘. the appeal with costs ‘ an in the‘ Court of Kings , (i. ._ to Health by Lydia E. Pihkhllfl’! Vegetable Compound _ a \ P Elm‘; N. B.—“F three m?‘ z m. nervous Ind xiii with tired feelings and could not do Irfilmz, trimmed with blue llld mu the house of Bcfanep-Photograph ls American Craft Destroyed ' Off Liverpool Port LIVERPOOL, Sept. TL-Aimost ct- lhausted and wet to the skin despite i his heavy oilskins. Captain 1m Mec- Nelll arrived at Liverpool at 12-30 xhis morning and told of the destruc- tion of the eight-ion American schooner-yacht Shegwang oi! Liver- pool Harbor at 5.3.] Thursday after- noon. In a little skiff the captain. who had trouble aviih his crew in Halifax and was sailing the vessel all alone, rowed to safety through rain and fog, not knowing semen-lino". whether he was going for shore o: out to sea. Captain MecNeill was on his we!‘ to Shelburne to get a new craft when fire broke out in the 83131.13 room. He was in the wheel house at the tune and the first indication of trou- ble was noticed when flames shot to the deck of the boa: From the first he saw, he said, that alcno he could do nothing w save tlir boat. but he stood by until he was sure Lliat no other craft was near and ‘lien goi on’ the row boat in which he made his way to shore. For hours he was lost, he said, but just keipt rowing in the hope of near- ling lend. When close to Livcrpoai l-llarbor he began lo get his DUJJUZZS from the buoys, and after that the hardest part of the trip was the row- ing. Arriving at Liverpool s6. 12.30. he went towards the first light he saw, which happened to be a garage. There he asked for a drink and then inquired about a piece to sleep. Be- lore he left the garage man learned the story of the loss of the yacht. roi- KINGSTON NOTES The farmers of this vicinity have finished their harvest and arq now busy threshing. The Mathleson and Holmes "Drive" has been completed and they are now ready for threshing. Kingston School has been progres- sing favourably under the skillful management of the Misses Gertrude Ackisnd and Reta Crewys. but is now closed for Fall vacation. It ll being repainted during the vacation. Mr. Chester Mathiellm was a Viv itor here on Sunday. g iuucas .-...............-............... U0 Ill] that corn with Billiard’: Llnhasnl I . H . K SPRAY Kills Flies, Roaches, Moths, Bed Bugs, etc. n-a srasru ofllulaeel emu‘. an” fhehiartef. lturesoellsatrepellaat pcelelfngafalnt and very pleasant perfume. Wlll not stafiordfsselsrwallserclotbfng x A ‘cum: ..‘. J l Made from young leaves OOK at the leaves on any bush; some are old and thick and heavy; others are young and green and tender. Only these young, tender sapfilled bud lcavce and shoots of the tea plant are used for King Cole Orange Pekoc Tea. b Furthermore, blended with choice Assams and high-grown Ccylons. are very costly Darjeelings from high up in the Hima~ layas, and equally rare monsoon-plucked Travan- cores from the hills of, Southern India. _ You know how good King . Cole Tea is, but King Colo Orange Pekoe, made from these tender leaves and rare, expensive crops, blended for fizillncss, strength and fia- vor. is even better than its. higher price would lead you to expect. YOll will enjoy King Cole Coffee too iicnuiiiw IIEPHRTEI] is uirisiiiieii NEW YORK, Sept, 2'7.—-'I’he New. York Times today publishes the fol-' lowing special cable from London: Ramsay MacDonald, now British Prime Minister, was deported from». Belgium as "undesirable," in the‘. autumn of i914, and one of-the-offi- cers who ‘issued the order is now Governor of an Australian state. This story is told for the first time in a. new biography. “J. Ramsay MacDonald: Labor's Man of Des- tiny," by H. Hessell Tiltman, which will be published here on Friday. It reveals that Mr. MacDonald volun- tecred with the ambulance unit in the earliest days of the war, and dis- played great courage under heavy shell fire. , When the war broke out, according to Mr. Tiltmufs story, Mr. MacDon- ald went to Belgium to join Dr, Hec- tor Monroe's ambulance unit, then at- tached to the Belgium army at Fumes. He was then a labor member of parliament; and volunteered on lo- eount of his "intense feeling for the victims of the, was." _ One night when Dr. Monroe return- ed to his headquarters, Mr. MacDon- ald could not be found, ‘This ls how Ifr. Tiltman tells the storyl- "Inquiries elicited fact tint he had been arrested by a some ion- ‘eral under instructions from the Brit- ish authorities. The excuse given for this official blunder was that his passpoatwasnotinordoififltleidll reason was that the hllhnll British m“ i 7 . Bu: ' e Rave Q - . Bu» Dorothy Dzx “..'I‘§.‘.“' m Marrllll ' rim-d.“ If the Younger Generation Ever Achieves _Its Ambition of Perfect Candor Before and After Marriage, What Few Marriages - ComeOE Will Inevitably End in Divorce, Says Dorothy Dix A Flapper has been explaining to me the code of the younger generation in dealing with the opposite sex. "You see,‘-' she said, "we are absolutely frank and honest with each other. ‘Ihere is no hypocrisy. We say exactly what we think, whether others like it or not. We don't hand out any blah and boloney. as the older generation of men end women used to do to each other. “Now. if I don't like the way a boy dresses, I tell him so, and ssk him why he doesn't‘ get some Kinsey Kut Koliege Kiothes instead of the hand-me-downs he is wearing. If a boy lacks pep, Idem pretend to him that I think he is a sheik. I let him know I con- sider him a flat tire. If {boy is {repeater who tells the same thing over and over again, I sey: ‘Can it; kid. It's old stuff and it slsys me.‘ ‘ "And when we of the younger generation get mar- ‘ '- ‘ ried we will be perfectly honest and frank with our husbands and wives. The"? WW1’! b9 8n)’ of this ycs-yessing each other and pussyfooting it around the angels of each other's dispositions in order to get along together. We will come out with the naked truth and the other one can lump it oil-leave it. “Why, when I see how my mother follies my father along and how she makes the gesture of deferring to his opinions when she knows perfectly well she is going to do, her own way, anyhow. it makes me actually sick. Why, she use! up cnwsh tact and diplomacy ih man ‘hi; father to run the whale League of Nations, and then have so me left over. None of "that domestic camouflaging for, mei When I get married I shall tell my husband plainly that I have his number, and Just where he gets on and gets off, and I shall expect him to be equally honest with me." “Ah," I said, "I perceive, than, that in the future when you of the young- ‘ er generation begin to put your matrimonial theories into-practice, divorce will not only be common, it will be universal. ‘Phat is. of course. if any of you get married. for Truthful James is no understudy to Cupid, hm- i; vgr- ecious Jane any man's ideal of a Lady Love. Courtship ls not founded on candor. It is constructed on a basis of make-believe. "Somehow I cannot visualize a man ever P01111111! the question to a girl who tells him to his face of his faults and weaknesses and does not conceal from him that she considers him a good deal of a dub, and that he fart within a million miles of being the hero of her dreams. "Nor can I imagine any man deliberately letting himself in for a. lifetime of the society of a woman who warns him before marriage that she is going to censor-his morals and his manners and his conduct and. make him gener- ally conform to her ideals of what a husband should be and that his days of freedom will end at the altar. . "Nor can I figure a girl saying ‘Yes’ to"a man who says; ‘Sally, you are certainly no treat w the eyes to look at, and sometimes when I listen to your conversation I wonder if your mother didn't drop you on your head when you were a baby. Also‘, I am a little leery of your temper, but you are healthy end strong. and we should be able to pull it off with not more than the average amount of scraps, and, of course, there is always the divorce court. so will you marry me?’ "Believe me. there would be very few marriages if courtship was con- ducted on a basis of absolute frankness, because no woman wants a close-up of how she looks toner lover, nor does any men desire to know lust exactly what his sweetheart thinks of him. The girl wants the man to draw a fancy picture of an angelic creature that she thinks that he thinks she is, and he prefers to believe that‘ he has her fooled into believing him a godling. “And if absolute candor between a men and woman is Mngorous before marriage, it is fatal after marriage. No husband or wife could survive the shock of being brutally told the disillusions that the close contact of the holy estate hes brought to the other. A timed bomb under the doorstep would not be more sure to blow a home to Kingdom Come than utter frankness around the hearthstons. ‘ . “As a mimi- ‘of ma. we have all seen 1c ti-ied out with disastrous re- sults. We ail know husbands who do not scruplc to tell their wives that they are morons who don't know what they are talking about when they express an oplni - Husbands who remark when the bread is heavy and opine that any idiot should be able to learn how to cook. Husbands who remark on how fat and homely their wives have got. Husbands, who even tell their wives that they don't know why they married them. "And we know wives who are equally truthful with their husbands. Wives who make no bones of letting, their husbands see that they bore them. Wives who tell their hmsum rum they consider um failures because they chm hi!!! more mbfllf. Wives who canes their husband's judgment and criticise everything thly do audiovisual! wear. I ~ a "And hi...‘ wipieiihvuisiay 1m ism-ire. or sue take their emeiii opfbicnofeaehothercoflwdlvoreeeourtsandgetadsoreeontlugrmlndl OQIlimtalGtIIeItymsthQQeiQUIIQHyThUhIPPY-Nlclfulhnmfi iawlslsb officials on the spot-ens of ‘whom is today governor of an important state within the Empire-considered him an undesirable person to be allowed, foservsontbeweaternfrontinany 959517151" : 1k. MacDonald was shipped back to mgland, but as soon as Lqrd Kit- chener heard of the incident he was extremely "wry. Ho issued a ‘ure- domnfbus" quarwfl. and the future Prime Min- islet went back to Belgium at once and resumed his ambulance work smasher use wlvesihepi- election‘ faiths end m invariably m» in nihisilhusumu wives aim and handle lmploalaub euth- u u mums manila, - Anaesthetics-mum.“ , .1‘ betwlcnf-lscflfl-NUWRTNU llil it with allalo aboutlbndwblfliou" a poor, faulty men and woman wbohave he'd; ' svoieesohetimmfsuorheviagmnfrvanltlcbetlbbve a Etiquette isnuunuue Married Woman Floors Gas-Eats Only Baby . Food "If! i years I ate only baby food. sis-invitation! i ‘wonder. Bvvtembei- ' nonhuman». m» wornbyltho @sn a6 chunaweddmg! .,, JHe-rlw. .miwavu tbsll lstldliltdflfl [Met p-Jgmg . - '- Q- What HMO! 8W1‘. '8' op‘ mwhmruuhinismwbnoeths“ Socidl and Personal -:-f‘ ‘F¢sh‘ib£s Mildly Bushfire! quaint BEAUTY QUESTIONS mews!!!) Illllll Ollollau halrthet u cutaneous-term!!! "Udmwhatcanluletoblcach it sndtskeawsytbsollinen? (l) I us pounds. Am 1 we stout? m I have a fair akin and blue 073- W11" colors are beoomlflt? , anus was. Anawer-(l) Shampoo you! h!!! once a week with an Olive '01! lhlm’ poo soap in liquid form. Lather and rinse your hair I18 upmh "mel- iuw- all u» me h» we 1'1"“ out you may apply. e MM H!" evenly all 0W! Y0“! hllf- 5"“ 5 rinse may be mild! of two tablespoon- full peroxide. one teupoenful am- monia and a quart of water. leave the mixture on for ton minutes and then rihss it all on in clear wafer T’. . ,1; l, -' wit; a W)’. 1 n 1/? \ green, orchid and golitjronse. brown and dry your hair. If your hair be- comes very oily between your weekly shampoos you apply to your scalp the following astringent: four (l) ounces cologne water; one (l) ounce white bay rum; one-half (Vi) dram spirit of icsema y. (I) Your weight is cot- rcct if you are 16 m-rl of use or tliembut. The average weight for that height er. ll rem of an is bl- tween lie and 122 pounds. You are not too stout. (s) You may wear dainty pastel shades in pink, blue. and the neutral, tans, beige, fll and ' sand shades are ” lng. Of course blue is the obvious choice for your type, You may wear Holland; Wedge- wood, cadet. sapphire, greenish blues and bright navy. Among the greens choose pale shades. almond and deep‘ blue-green. Black is good feroen- trast. Ilesh, old rose‘. gray" orchid. blue-violet, cream and Burgundy are good. D015 LIEDB. shampoo for Olly late Deer Miss Leeds-Once a week does not seem often enough to‘ wean my hair since it is very oily. Please sul- geata goodlhampooformcteuu. ~- HINIIJEITA k. Asmara Iced shampoo mixture‘ foreilyhalrmaybemsdsof two (I) ounces tincture of [Non leap, two <1) ounces alcohol or bay rumand one-half (Si) ounce tincture of rele- mary. Lather and rinse your hair several tunes before the flnsl rinse; Excessive oillnsss of the heir is seme- downphnlceloeadlflmandlbsueii cases maybsccrreeudbyinlprovfnl one‘: general health. U018 Ill. lsawvlnghrta: DearMlssI-ieedlv-Ihl-vltartlrofl thslnekofimytpetlhfsthmaway foremeveltwlfheut going to the dentist‘! _ Aflllllu Answer-nun are weparitieas sold f0! MIIOIVDQ tartar but ltfl unwlsetouutbmutnsyarellbsly filefiuetiieteotufllneseetwavu to have a-dlatllt reams he deposits relullflyondedcfileoayear. balnluleditabdfoundltvtrygood butllmttblroefnrleasoprh a '0' Dear Miss Leeds: (1) I have blond am! feet 8% inches tall and we!!!“ tlmssdusfonervouneuanderun-i l/Vhnr tfhe ‘Fa l‘ illustrated Dr lighter tone For more ‘velvet, used f suede finish ing tone, or woolen coat tern Departr Wlnterl Fes cents, but no. 296a. fun-senses . eaelaeoese City dered with Wm- '\eeee0estlOOIOII p ‘ t Addrbll iii . . =1 it." a . made of wov plaid’ MUN»!!! ‘ ' ..._-_._..._.---.¢-_-pq.q> naeeseeevoooallolllO~l llessoealllll0lillfl' ame ll A A mess, ,' . The Ensemble in tweed in heather hrvwh tones undoubtedly is the most Am“- ulatsdituck-ln blouse of ~fist~ silk crepe in toast-tan shade. with suede belt in soft brown- tone indicatlnl higher waistline» .'I‘hs skirt ivbox- save pl ' centered m: sendln by mall." a zhgsmil; ‘r AL perms Wewleeremfrem. domes 110B. doting hggg praotl d artest fashio an; hasatllislln some aim: m“ “d” "w" ml‘- Style m. 2m sketched achieves ‘ m!“ 14m‘ hill- ' h - u‘ “m”! '5'". . i youthful sop isticatlon fliroulh aim Bu‘, "m it Wnm a will plsihid across front with plain . sis-sight slim back, preferred for The ‘coat is in’ seventh-eighth length. The fronts are underfaced with plain woolen in harmonizing tone and rolled-into revers with- col- " ‘W lar. ‘ Sleeves have cuffs of plain; woolen which appears again in ap- plied binds of pockets, v It ll dcllgliddn lllel l2, 14,16. ll and‘ 20 years. and you'll find it very simple to make. It is very youthful too in mauve- red tweed with mulching silk crepe blouse. ’ " or Your Kid i it supplies 3 fuel for the ene hat- keeos them e and arowlne. No to stuff or set let azv. susar end ‘fiend seejhow ‘ruddi ~ 9111s and slrls, rose s... j “ 11's the n8 A .1101‘. hslaltli-L ll s31 ‘s; fgfgy m‘ waist lir- |1>f' and pick over- om l ‘K? With clock, my“ dish 1.1km.“ h” on? nd well-buttered y.‘ _ °"“mb5 10c the q _ . dot with bu one cu s 1M0 see ha: 1:: m“ lllsc WRIGL for l e ‘ I 1 luff ~s NCIIEON schflm, Needear 5%..